7 Rifles enter ‘The Ugly Gun’ Club (VIDEO)

If you want to get technical about it, a rifle is just about any shoulder fired long arm used to hit targets accurately at long distances. Nothing in there says anything about being easy on the eyes and indeed never once did aesthetics alone make one shooter better than another. But it does hurt sales, and with that in mind, we take a look at a number of rifles that no one ever would consider gun porn.

1. Italian-Swiss oddity

Italian Vetterli rifle (perhaps a little too whimsical?)

A product of a time when things were made by hand, the Model 1870/87 Vetterli Rifle was the standard weapon of the Italian army of the late 19th century. It has a very Jules Verne look to it and you get the feel it would be at home at a Steampunk convention—well that is until they found out it was an actual firearm and not something made up. Anyway, this 10.4mm blackpowder bolt gun is actually collectable, so fight off the goggle-wearing punkers and make your way back to the gun show pronto if you find one for sale.

2. Hi-Point carbine “Planet of the Apes” gun

They may be heavily armed apes, but they’re also frugal apes.

We know, we know, the Hi-Point carbine is super popular, reliable, so on, and so forth, ad nauseam, but you have to admit, it’s pretty homely. Early models of the gun came in a rather dapper soft plastic stock that looks like you stole the rifle right from those ‘damned dirty apes’. Well we all look like monkeys now because these guns are selling for nearly $600 after they made late night drive in appearances on the 2013 Assault Weapons Ban lists.

Hi Point carbine. Black plastic does make a statement.

3. Thumbstock AWB rifles

Did we say ‘Assault Weapons Ban’? Well let’s hop into Guns.com’s company time machine and travel back to 1994. That was when suddenly all of previously legal semi-auto sporters based on the FN, AR, AK, and other designs had to be modified to eliminate the evil that was the pistol grip. To do so and still keep the same basic firearm, manufacturers produced these rifles with the abomination that is the thumbhole stock. About the only thing this accomplished was a run on replacement stocks after the ban was sunset. Kill it! Kill it with fire!

Thumbhole-stocked assault rifle of the 1990s. An answer to a question nobody asked.

4. Vintage Schuetzen Rifles

Martini-Schuetzen rifle. Now doesn’t that look comfortable?

If Liberace lived in the 1880s and wanted a long-range gallery shooter, he would have had a sweet Schuetzen on the wall. Schuetzen rifles, finely crafted heavy target guns, originated in Germanic countries in the 19th century. Brought to this country by immigrants, the German-Americans started local shooting matches that caught the eyes of the locals and by the late 1800s, the matches had become wide spread. Affluent society types attended the matches and, naturally had to have blinged out pieces of their own to show off while waiting for their turn at the target. This keeping up with the Jones’s arms race led to increasingly ornate designs that used scrollwork, exotic woods, and the like to create guns so beautiful that they were…well… bizarre.

German Schuetzen rifle by Miller Valgrass. You do know Valgrass, don’t you?

5. Armscor Model 1600

Possibly the only good thing you can say about the aesthetics of this 22 pipsqueak is that the sight of it would likely send Diane Feinstein into a panic attack. Other than that, it is a dead ringer for an abstract painting of an M16 if you squint very hard and dim the lights, though they definitely didn’t have to worry about Colt suing them for copyright infringements. Made by Philippine juggernaut Armscor, it was at least cheap, selling for less than $200 in the 1980s.

The Armscor 1600. It’s like you played ‘Telephone’ with the M16 design from Hartford to Manila.

6. SIG 510

The Swiss have a firearms legacy that nobody really wants to poke a stick at. After all, they haven’t had to kick out an invader in 500 years even though they were geographically in the middle of both World Wars. But, have you ever looked at the SIG 510? Known in Alps as the Sturmgewehr 57, it was Switzerland’s main battle rifle for most of the Cold War. When most of the world still used wooden stocks, the Swiss went with rubber coated fore and buttstocks that were ribbed for your shooting pleasure. A very long rifle, it tipped the scales at nearly 13-pounds. Still, despite looking like stretched out taffy it shoots like a laser.

The SIg 510 or in Switzerland, the Sturmgewehr 57 or in gun forums “that long ass assault rifle”

7. The Soviet TKB-059 prototype

With a design that looks as if it would make a factory worker sh*t terror, this space age piece of Commie steel was a three-barreled gas operated bullpup assault rifle that could rip out 1800-rounds of 7.62x39mm per minute for as long as its 90-round box (tub?) magazine held up. Its father, Hermann Korobov produced this 10-pound rifle that shot so fast that all three rounds of its single shot per barrel burst typically entered the same ragged hole. Designed in the 1960s, it was never adopted.

Behold! The TKB-059.

Even the AK was prettier than that thing.

Honorable mention: World War II SMGs

Motley crew of WWII subguns.

If you have a soft spot in your heart for WWII action movies, you cannot help but be a fan of the submachine guns of the era but that doesn’t mean these subguns are winning any beauty pageants. The Australian Owen looked like a cheap paint ball gun. Calling the M3 a Grease Gun insulted actual grease gun makers everywhere. The Sten looked so unsafe that many users wouldn’t even touch it. The Soviet PPS43 didn’t even look like it was finished before they put it into production. Don’t even get me started on the last ditch German and Japanese guns of the war. The one thing you will never hear about these chattering 45ACP, 9 milly, and Tokaraev-chewing burp guns is that they are pretty. So ugly they are beautiful maybe, but never pretty.

I wouldn't count the Hi-Point. I actually like the looks of my new 4095. As for the thumb-hole stock, it was what was ugly and TERRIBLE, however, that didn't mean the fine firearm it ended up attached to was ugly. I've seen some fine, even beautiful, rifles get the dis-honor of a thumb-hole stock. And, shouldn't their be more French guns on this list?

One think I'd like to mention. A few years ago I was photographing a large collection of movie props & memorabilia, and one of the pieces was an actual gun used in the Planet of the Apes movies. It consisted of a 2 part clamshell that fitted over a standard M-1 Carbine that was modified to shoot blanks. I never got the chance to fire the piece, but it was pretty cool to see how they did it.

One in the same. Daewoo is a Korean company that produces a wide range of things from small appliance to cars and guns. They no longer import much of anything to the US but they still provided most of the weapons to the Korean military.

"a rifle is just about any shoulder fired long arm WITH RIFLING, WITH A KINETIC-ENERGY (NON-EXPLODING) PROJECTILE, PROPELLED BY EXPANDING PROPELLANT GASES (NON-ROCKET), used to hit targets accurately at long distances." Fixed it for them. This definition excludes muskets and other smoothbores, excludes RPGs, bazookas, LAWs, and similar (which I suppose are also excluded by smoothbore part), but includes muzzleloading rifles with rifling (i.e. metallic cartridge case not required).

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I guess. I think the hi point is ugly, but SOME of the thumbhole stocks that came about from the AWB weren't so bad. Some I actually liked. I just hate how they came about. The Sig definitely makes it IMO, but the WW2 subguns I find ironic. Some of them are hideous for sure, but the Thompson is one of the finest looking SMGs of all time!

I REALLY, REALLY like their older, roller delayed rifles(And I'm sure you would love the tech too) for both looks and tech(Even as old as it is). I think they're pistols and AWB-friendly carbines/rifles are ugly as sin though. The one exception was the P7M8, which was another technologically awesome pistol and very cool looking too.

Also, the Planet of the Apes rifle was an M1 Carbine, with a shroud that covered the magazine and all of the barrel - but yeah, with the shroud, it looks more like a Hi-Point than an M1 carbine. And the Hi-points didn't exist in 1968 for that matter.